Shakespeare's lives / S. Schoenbaum.
1991
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Details
Title
Shakespeare's lives / S. Schoenbaum.
Edition
New edition.
ISBN
0198186185 (hardcover)
9780198186182 (hardcover)
9780198186182 (hardcover)
Published
Oxford : Clarendon Press ; New York : Oxford University Press, 1991.
Copyright
©1991
Language
English
Description
xix, 612 pages : 30 illustrations ; 24 cm
System Control No.
(OCoLC)23014800
Summary
This volume presents a study of the changing images and differing ways that the life of English poet and playwright William Shakespeare (1564-1616) has been interpreted throughout history. The author takes readers on a tour of the countless myths and legends which have arisen to explain the great dramatist's life and work, bringing the story right up to 1989. He reconstructs as much of the elusive author's life as possible, considering his family history, his economic standing, and his reputation with his peers; the Shakespeare who emerges may not always be the familiar one.
Schoenbaum's study of the changing images of Shakespeare throughout history broke important new ground; but in the years since this book first appeared many scholars have followed his lead, and Shakespeare studies has progressed by leaps and bounds. Now, Schoenbaum, one of "the heroes of Shakespeare scholarship," according to Wells, has revised and up-dated this classic study of Shakespeare and his biographers, taking account of the most recent scholarship, adding a chapter on "Recent Lives," and abridging certain sections. Schoenbaum takes us on a tour of the countless myths and legends which have arisen to explain the great dramatist's life and work, bringing the story right up to 1989 with the publication of A.L. Rowse's Discovering Shakespeare. In the new edition, the emphasis is on more recent "lives" of Shakespeare, with information culled from such diverse sources as E.A.J. Honigmann's Shakespeare: The "Lost Years" and Richard Ellmann's Oscar Wilde (Wilde's Portrait of Mr W.H. advanced his theory of the Sonnets in fictional form). Besides fanciful theories such as Wilde's, Schoenbaum covers those who have used blatant forgery to construct an imaginary Shakespeare, such as W.H. Ireland and J.P. Collier (the latter would occasionally add his own verse to the Shakespeare canon), and those who have attempted elaborate argumentation to establish the identity of Shakespearean characters (A.L. Rowse claimed to have identified the elusive "Dark Lady" of the Sonnets). From Ben Jonson, whose celebratory verse opens the First Folio of Shakespeare's complete works (published seven years after his death), to Malcolm X, who denied the existence of a historical Shakespeare, Shakespeare's Lives considers virtually the entire legacy of idolatry, heresy, and speculation.
As before, Schoenbaum submits the documentary record of Shakespeare's life to careful consideration. Like a literary detective, he reconstructs as much of the elusive author's life as possible, considering his family history, his economic standing, and his reputation with his peers. The Shakespeare who emerges may not always be the familiar one (he was less vaunted by his contemporaries than we usually believe, for example), but all of Schoenbaum's claims are exquisitely documented. Even in this revised and abridged version, Schoenbaum's narrative leaves hardly a stone unturned--from Samuel Johnson, Samuel Coleridge, and Alexander Pope to twentieth-century writers like James Joyce, E.K. Chambers, and Anthony Burgess (whose popular life of Shakespeare appeared the same year as the first edition of Schoenbaum's book). Curiousity about Shakespeare has not subsided since the original version of this classic appeared. This new edition will make the latest lives of Shakespeare available to a whole new generation of the Bard's fanatical followers.
Schoenbaum's study of the changing images of Shakespeare throughout history broke important new ground; but in the years since this book first appeared many scholars have followed his lead, and Shakespeare studies has progressed by leaps and bounds. Now, Schoenbaum, one of "the heroes of Shakespeare scholarship," according to Wells, has revised and up-dated this classic study of Shakespeare and his biographers, taking account of the most recent scholarship, adding a chapter on "Recent Lives," and abridging certain sections. Schoenbaum takes us on a tour of the countless myths and legends which have arisen to explain the great dramatist's life and work, bringing the story right up to 1989 with the publication of A.L. Rowse's Discovering Shakespeare. In the new edition, the emphasis is on more recent "lives" of Shakespeare, with information culled from such diverse sources as E.A.J. Honigmann's Shakespeare: The "Lost Years" and Richard Ellmann's Oscar Wilde (Wilde's Portrait of Mr W.H. advanced his theory of the Sonnets in fictional form). Besides fanciful theories such as Wilde's, Schoenbaum covers those who have used blatant forgery to construct an imaginary Shakespeare, such as W.H. Ireland and J.P. Collier (the latter would occasionally add his own verse to the Shakespeare canon), and those who have attempted elaborate argumentation to establish the identity of Shakespearean characters (A.L. Rowse claimed to have identified the elusive "Dark Lady" of the Sonnets). From Ben Jonson, whose celebratory verse opens the First Folio of Shakespeare's complete works (published seven years after his death), to Malcolm X, who denied the existence of a historical Shakespeare, Shakespeare's Lives considers virtually the entire legacy of idolatry, heresy, and speculation.
As before, Schoenbaum submits the documentary record of Shakespeare's life to careful consideration. Like a literary detective, he reconstructs as much of the elusive author's life as possible, considering his family history, his economic standing, and his reputation with his peers. The Shakespeare who emerges may not always be the familiar one (he was less vaunted by his contemporaries than we usually believe, for example), but all of Schoenbaum's claims are exquisitely documented. Even in this revised and abridged version, Schoenbaum's narrative leaves hardly a stone unturned--from Samuel Johnson, Samuel Coleridge, and Alexander Pope to twentieth-century writers like James Joyce, E.K. Chambers, and Anthony Burgess (whose popular life of Shakespeare appeared the same year as the first edition of Schoenbaum's book). Curiousity about Shakespeare has not subsided since the original version of this classic appeared. This new edition will make the latest lives of Shakespeare available to a whole new generation of the Bard's fanatical followers.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 569-598) and index.
Formatted Contents Note
I. Materials for a life
The Shakespeares of Warwickshire
The Burgher of Stratford
The Player and the Playwright of London
End of the Line
Green [Robert] and Chettle [Henry]
Reputation
Shakespeare Canon
II. Shakespeare of the legends : the first biographers
Shakespeare's epitaphs
Relics and Associations
Traditions of writing and acting
Shakespeare and the Vintner : .. versus Jonson [Ben]
and the Davenants [Sir William Davenant]
Personal legends : youth and education
the Deer-poacher
the Toper
Legends of Shakespeare's maturity
death and burial
Shakespeare's faith
Legends of books and manuscripts, the malediction
First biographical notices
Nicholas Rowe
The Tribe of Nicolas
III. Edmond Malone
The Rise of bardolatry
Farmer [Richard] and Shakespeare's learning
Stratford Jubilee
Malone : the making of a scholar ... the Supplement and other writings .. the 1790 Shakespeare
Stratford visitors
William
Henry Ireland, the first impositions
Ireland, the major impositions
Malone's "Inquiry"
Postscript : George Chalmers
Malone : the posthumous life.
IV. Earlier Nineteenth century [19th]
Romantics ; [Robert Bell] Wheler and [Nathan] Drake
[James] Boaden and the Sonnets
Various pictures
[William] Gifford and the Mermaid Club
[Charles] Severn and Ward's Diary [Rev. John Ward]
Various Lives ; Encyclopedias
The Peele Letter and Fenton's Tour [George Peele, Richard Fenton]
J. Payne Collier
a Forger's Progress ; Exposure
Joseph Hunter
V. Victorians
A Victorian Popularizer ; Knight's Shakespere [Charles Knight]
Halliwell[-Phillips] : the Cambridge manuscripts affair ; Achievements of an Antiquary ; the last years
Alexander Dyce
American and continental biographies
Sonnets : Divers theories
Oscar Wilde .. Samuel Butler .. Dark Lady and Rival Poet
Faith and works
Masks, bones, and portraits
Arnold and Bagehot
Other amateurs ; New Shakespeare Society
Edward Dowden .. Georg Brandes .. Sir Sidney Lee: DNB
Lee's Shakespeare
VI. Deviations
Delia Bacon
First Unbelievers
Representative Baconians
Repercussions : Dr. Owen ... Elisabeth Gallup ... Other cryptanalysts ... Groupists
Looney and the Oxfordians
[Sigmund] Freud ... other claimants.
VII. Twentieth Century
Elton and Masson [Charles Isaac Elton, David Masson]
Charlotte Carmichael Stopes
The Wallaces [Charles William and Hulda Alfreda Wallace]
Joseph Gray
The Grafton Portrait
Lytton Strachey ... Frank Harris ... Harris vs. Shaw
Studies Mad and Bad
Dark Ladies
Edgar I. Fripp .. Joseph Quincy Adams ... Smart and Alexander
E.K. Chambers
John Dover Wilson
Shakespeare's mythical sorrows
Aspects of Shakespeare
Leslie Hotston
Journey to the Unconscious
Pop biography
Journey's End.
The Shakespeares of Warwickshire
The Burgher of Stratford
The Player and the Playwright of London
End of the Line
Green [Robert] and Chettle [Henry]
Reputation
Shakespeare Canon
II. Shakespeare of the legends : the first biographers
Shakespeare's epitaphs
Relics and Associations
Traditions of writing and acting
Shakespeare and the Vintner : .. versus Jonson [Ben]
and the Davenants [Sir William Davenant]
Personal legends : youth and education
the Deer-poacher
the Toper
Legends of Shakespeare's maturity
death and burial
Shakespeare's faith
Legends of books and manuscripts, the malediction
First biographical notices
Nicholas Rowe
The Tribe of Nicolas
III. Edmond Malone
The Rise of bardolatry
Farmer [Richard] and Shakespeare's learning
Stratford Jubilee
Malone : the making of a scholar ... the Supplement and other writings .. the 1790 Shakespeare
Stratford visitors
William
Henry Ireland, the first impositions
Ireland, the major impositions
Malone's "Inquiry"
Postscript : George Chalmers
Malone : the posthumous life.
IV. Earlier Nineteenth century [19th]
Romantics ; [Robert Bell] Wheler and [Nathan] Drake
[James] Boaden and the Sonnets
Various pictures
[William] Gifford and the Mermaid Club
[Charles] Severn and Ward's Diary [Rev. John Ward]
Various Lives ; Encyclopedias
The Peele Letter and Fenton's Tour [George Peele, Richard Fenton]
J. Payne Collier
a Forger's Progress ; Exposure
Joseph Hunter
V. Victorians
A Victorian Popularizer ; Knight's Shakespere [Charles Knight]
Halliwell[-Phillips] : the Cambridge manuscripts affair ; Achievements of an Antiquary ; the last years
Alexander Dyce
American and continental biographies
Sonnets : Divers theories
Oscar Wilde .. Samuel Butler .. Dark Lady and Rival Poet
Faith and works
Masks, bones, and portraits
Arnold and Bagehot
Other amateurs ; New Shakespeare Society
Edward Dowden .. Georg Brandes .. Sir Sidney Lee: DNB
Lee's Shakespeare
VI. Deviations
Delia Bacon
First Unbelievers
Representative Baconians
Repercussions : Dr. Owen ... Elisabeth Gallup ... Other cryptanalysts ... Groupists
Looney and the Oxfordians
[Sigmund] Freud ... other claimants.
VII. Twentieth Century
Elton and Masson [Charles Isaac Elton, David Masson]
Charlotte Carmichael Stopes
The Wallaces [Charles William and Hulda Alfreda Wallace]
Joseph Gray
The Grafton Portrait
Lytton Strachey ... Frank Harris ... Harris vs. Shaw
Studies Mad and Bad
Dark Ladies
Edgar I. Fripp .. Joseph Quincy Adams ... Smart and Alexander
E.K. Chambers
John Dover Wilson
Shakespeare's mythical sorrows
Aspects of Shakespeare
Leslie Hotston
Journey to the Unconscious
Pop biography
Journey's End.
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